Symptoms of nitrogen saturation in two central Appalachian hardwood forest ecosystems

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Abstract

By synthesizing more than twenty years of research at the Fernow Experimental Forest, we have documented 7 symptoms of nitrogen saturation in two adjacent watersheds. The symptoms include: 1) high relative rates of net nitrification, 2) long-term increases in stream-water concentrations of nitrate and base cations, 3) relatively high nitrate concentrations in solution losses, 4) little seasonal variability in stream-water nitrate concentrations, 5) a high discharge of nitrate from a young aggrading forest, 6) a rapid increase in nitrate loss following fertilization of a young aggrading forest, and 7) low retention of inorganic nitrogen when compared with other forested sites. These data support current conceptual models of nitrogen saturation and provide a strong, and perhaps the best, example of nitrogen saturation in the United States.

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Peterjohn, W. T., Adams, M. B., & Gilliam, F. S. (1996). Symptoms of nitrogen saturation in two central Appalachian hardwood forest ecosystems. Biogeochemistry, 35(3), 507–522. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02183038

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